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- <text id=90TT0598>
- <title>
- Mar. 05, 1990: Love's Labor
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Mar. 05, 1990 Gossip
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 68
- Love's Labor
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <qt> <l>C.S. LEWIS: A BIOGRAPHY</l>
- <l>by A.N. Wilson</l>
- <l>Norton; 334 pages; $22.50</l>
- </qt>
- <p> To a substantial battalion of devotees, Clive Staples Lewis--the Christian apologist, children's fabulist and Oxbridge
- don who died in 1963--was a contemporary saint. His latest
- biographer notes with some bemusement that there is a kind of
- shrine to his memory at Illinois' evangelical Wheaton College:
- one of his old tankards is enclosed there in glass, like a
- relic. But difficulties face those who would canonize the
- author of Mere Christianity and the Narnia chronicles. A.N.
- Wilson, a British writer who has previously taken sensitive
- measure of Milton, Tolstoy and Hilaire Belloc, portrays Lewis
- as a blustery, hard-drinking eccentric whose private life
- included sequential liaisons with two married women.
- </p>
- <p> The second son of a Belfast lawyer, Lewis never quite
- recovered from the death of his mother when he was nine. After
- graduating from Oxford, he predictably became a teacher there.
- Less expectably, he began to live with Janie ("Minto") Moore,
- who had been deserted by her husband; she was Lewis' senior by
- 25 years. Initially lovers, or so Wilson speculates, they
- settled into a surrogate mother-son relationship after their
- unorthodox menage was joined by Lewis' elder brother Warren,
- who had been cashiered from the army for alcoholism.
- </p>
- <p> Four years after Moore's death in 1951, Lewis fell in love
- with someone young enough to be his daughter. Chicago-born Joy
- Davidman Gresham, a Jewish convert to Roman Catholicism, had
- two sons from a failing marriage. When she and Lewis wed--privately, since Anglican canon law barred his marriage to a
- divorcee--he was 58; Joy was 39 and already suffering from
- the cancer that would kill her in 1960.
- </p>
- <p> In her declining years, Moore had become a querulous
- termagant. Gresham was an assertive "battle-axe" (Lewis' term)
- whose brassiness embarrassed his donnish cronies. Lewis'
- hagiolaters seem almost as uncomfortable with these
- relationships as he was. Yet both women were central to his
- life's pilgrimage: Moore as nurturer, Gresham as stimulus to
- erotic feelings long suppressed. Sainthood, Wilson suggests, is
- all in the beholder's eye. If Lewis deserved the honor, his
- love for these two unlikely consorts was a reason why.
- </p>
- <p>By John Elson.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-